Concrete home construction

   / Concrete home construction
  • Thread Starter
#91  
Bugstruck,

Yes location, location location. Oh and time of year! And that is the core of the problem. The configuration that is best in Fall will not be optimal in 96 deg Summer with high humidity. The best design is the one that benifits more days per year than another design. I saw a report where a caution was placed on a design where it was so efficiet that the AC never runs, too much humidity.


When I first started seeing ICFs, I liked them but as I thought about it did not make sence. How can they claim supper insulation and effective high thermal mass? If that insulation is doing such a good job, the thermal mass isn't going to be exposed to much heat. ICFs are definately better than standard frame construction. I also don't like the foam inside and out. They say you can stuco the outside but once a baseball hits it, you got a nice dent. With the concrete on the exposed sides, I would have stuco on the outside and a thin layer of plaster on the inside. Both sides would have a textured look
 
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   / Concrete home construction #92  
"The only better place for that thermal mass could be inside the exterior walls?? I know that is often done on passive solar but I'm not aware of anyone intentionally putting thermal mass on the inside of the home in a conventionally controlled envionment. "

Big herkin masonry chimneys that are within the envelope offer an effective thermal mass that you can warm up with the fire.
 
   / Concrete home construction #93  
Paddy said:
Bugstruck,

Yes location, location location. Oh and time of year! And that is the core of the problem. The configuration that is best in Fall will not be optimal in 96 deg Summer with high humidity. The best design is the one that benifits more days per year than another design. I saw a report where a caution was placed on a design where it was so efficiet that the AC never runs, too much humidity.


When I first started seeing ICFs, I liked them but as I thought about it did not make sence. How can they claim supper insulation and effective high thermal mass? If that insulation is doing such a good job, the thermal mass isn't going to be exposed to much heat. ICFs are definately better than standard frame construction. I also don't like the foam inside and out. They say you can stuco the outside but once a baseball hits it, you got a nice dent. With the concrete on the exposed sides, I would have stuco on the outside and a thin layer of plaster on the inside. Both sides would have a textured look

You must be thinking of a one coat acrylic stucco. Why not do a 3 coat? That is the standard for better quality. With anchors every 8, you have better and more options to anchor whatever material you decide to use. I have yet to see an ICF that says "this is the overall R value" that their product has. Nudura makes the claim only on the actual foam, but that thermal mass will effectively add to that. The super insulation quality you must be refering to comes into play in more ways then meets the eye. No wall pockets, no header pockets, no studs which will drop the entire wall R value well below that of the insulation, no air infilitration flowing through the wall significantly reducing the effectiveness of conventional insulations. Reducing humidty, if it is a problem in your area can very easliy and effectively be accomplished without an AC and at less cost. I would much prefer a situation where I do not run my AC as frequently. While ICF will decrease your cooling costs, you still will probably have a conventional ceiling system. You won't get away from some AC with ICF and one thing you can count on, electricity will increase in price! Count on most areas of the US going to a progresive rate, the more you use, the base rate will continuie to escalate. Plan and be prepared.
 
   / Concrete home construction #94  
The whole issue of thermal mass effects of various types of concrete
house construction has been beat to death in the ICFWeb forums. It
would be interesting to see the real word performance of a system that
utilizes no interior insulation. There is, of course, tons of real world
data on ICF performance with insul on both interior and exterior of the
forms.

Don't forget that in overall performance of an all-concrete house you
have to take into account the so-called thermal siphoning effect of a
large portion of the exterior walls being below grade. Virtualy all houses
will benefit from basements as part of a monolithic concrete house.

On the subject of stucco exteriors, that is a big one, too. The newer
thin-coat polymer-modifiied stuccos used by themselves over ICFs can
be easy to damage. Conventional stucco (Portland-based) over steel
lath, 7/8" thick is extremely durable. Unlike in stick frame construction,
conventional stucco over ICFs require no weep screeds, no expansion
joints, and no paper-backed lath. On my house, I used the 3-coat
with top color coat. Some systems now employ convention scratch and
brown coats with a polymer top coat, which yields more color choices
and a waterproof seal.
 
   / Concrete home construction
  • Thread Starter
#95  
dfkrug,

The web site I listed has good data performed by a lab endorced by the DOE for concrete inside and foam outside. Also Concrete/foam/concrete. In the study these two are conpared to ICFs.

I would not consider an "all concrete home". I plan a concrete/foam/concrete method. In this case the exterior concrete is isolated from the inside concrete except the ties that join the panels. The concrete floors/roof only rest on the inner concrete walls, again to isolate. There would be some exposure from the bacement level.

Can you reccomend a ICF discussion board?
 
   / Concrete home construction #96  
Paddy said:
dfkrug,


Can you reccomend a ICF discussion board?

I am no longer an active participant myself, but try
ICFweb.com

It is commercial, but ICFTalk includes forums from users, designers,
and explorers. It has been thru many changes as the industry
has matured and I do not know how good it is now.
 
   / Concrete home construction
  • Thread Starter
#97  
dfkrug,

Thanks for the link, I'll check it out. I like your ending statement, "I used to be an engineer, but now I get to build things." . I was a carpenter that moved to engineering. Back injury :( I have always felt my experince as a carpenter made me an engineer, not the book work.
 
   / Concrete home construction #98  
Highbeam said:
"The only better place for that thermal mass could be inside the exterior walls?? I know that is often done on passive solar but I'm not aware of anyone intentionally putting thermal mass on the inside of the home in a conventionally controlled envionment. "

Big herkin masonry chimneys that are within the envelope offer an effective thermal mass that you can warm up with the fire.

I didn't think of that. Yes they do work much better than an exterior wall location. Had a central chimney in one of my childhood homes. Best conventional heating fireplace I ever saw. Probably was a net negative heat loss during fire-up at least. The baseboard heat didn't crackle much whan that was stoked up for more than a few hours though. I was old enough to notice that it hardly ran at all. But then the home was only about 1300 SF and the fireplace was exposed masonry front, back, and one side. The back got pretty toasty too.

A friend of mine has (2) woodstoves in an 1100 +/- SF home. Only runs one unless it's approaching zero and blowing. Maybe twice a year. Amazing how easy they are to heat at that size. Small stove in the basement about runs you out of the entire home. Burns it day and night and only goes through about 3 cords of mixed hardwoods a season. I think we are eventually headed back to smaller and even more energy efficient homes and the big builders are missing the boat. They make too much sense not too, high land prices or no. Cookie cutter that combo and you could make some coin. People would line up - even in this market IMO. Particularily in this market.

I forgot to mention.... He has aluminum sliding windows, 1970's vintage, no storms, and T-1-11 directly over 2 x 4 studs. R-11 insulation and half the main floor is true cathedraled ceiling that's 2 x 8's (thin) with a massive stone fireplace on the outside wall and some more poor glass either side. He doesn't like the baseboard electric bills. He told me 4 years ago his total electric could go to around $200.00 a month on a cold month. So he went to wood at $100.00/ cord at that time. He has no idea the value in that little place. Frees him up to live a very comfortable life on a modest income. Big boat, beach home, and the like. You'd think he knocked down 200K+ a year. Not at all.
 
   / Concrete home construction #99  
Paddy said:
I was a carpenter that moved to engineering. Back injury :( I have always felt my experince as a carpenter made me an engineer, not the book work.

It always seemed to me that if I did the research and then designed
something to meet a need, then I was missing out on a big part of
the creative process by not getting to build the product. This is true of
widgets, systems, software, or buildings. There is a place for theory and
a place for application.
 

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